I don't know if this will help you any, Lionheart. I'm just throwing this out there. In my case, I realized eventually that once I figured out how to deal with my mother, that's when the PTSD came on. I had lots of traumatic experiences that had nothing to do with her, well, mostly -- I think she was partly responsible for the first thing, but, anyway -- she was the primary distraction in my life for decades. I have been in and out of therapy since I was 15, but the only thing I ever talked about was my mother, because she was the major ongoing problem in my life. She was basically a narcissist and trained me to be codependant. It was when I finally was given the gift of how to disentangle her from myself that the PTSD came on. It was like, okay, now I know how to deal with my mother, and then all of a sudden all this junk from my past comes back to haunt me. One hand gives, then the other hand takes away. Then began the long process of talking out my non-mother experiences in therapy. I haven't gotten them all processed yet. My therapist was not a trauma specialist and I don't think she really gets how much I've been through, though that's on me, I think. Anyway, I would be happy to be your sounding board, but I also think it might be better for you to get this out with your therapist, provided you trust him or her.